Actual rating: 4.25
With a vivid and rich narrative, Karen Barrow tells a layered and complex story of family, betrayal, and love through the eyes of a mixed-race young boy living on a cocoa plantation in the Caribbean. Moreover, she shows how the choices made by people in the past live on to affect those remaining, and how from pain and suffering new possibilities can arise, bringing good news with them.
The plot is well-structured, with Joe's recollection of his childhood and teenagehood on the estate as the main story, brought up by the inquiry of a Canadian visitor asking about her grandfather and his relation to Palmyra, the estate where tragic events occured at the turning of the century. Issues of race and racism are portraited thoughtfully and with an appealing focus on mixed race and the internal hierarchy based on race in the society of the time.
The addition of a hint of mystery is intriguing, and keeps the plot even more interesting, without turning it into a mystery book or overshadowing the main narration of the family's story.
Barrow'a prose is smooth and never feels heavy, not even when specific words about race and indentured workers are used nor when creole or patois words are used. Regarding this, I really appreciate the presence of local customs through references to food, beliefs, and habits.
I'm grateful to the author and the publisher for allowing me to the arc through NetGalley.